The New Yorker looks back on Robert Polidori's images of Havana

February 5, 2014

In the January 26, 1998 issue of the magazine, Paul Goldberger reported on the declining state of Havana’s architectural heritage, as well as on the Cuban preservationists who were attempting to salvage it. Robert Polidori, The New Yorker’s staff photographer at the time, accompanied Goldberger to Cuba. The two men travelled around Havana in a red-and-white 1953 Chevrolet and knocked on the doors of the city’s crumbling mansions. Polidori’s photographs of the buildings’ interiors, which he shot with a large-format camera, are vivid depictions of Goldberger’s observation that decay had not yet destroyed the “majestic presence” of Havana’s grand villas.

For the full article and a slideshow of Polidori's work, please visit The New Yorker.